I have a Kimber Mk2 Custom. IMO, a 1911 isn't a gun for someone who isn't willing to learn some basic to intermediate gun smithing. The 1911 design simply doesn't lend itself mass production and there is a chance you may get one that needs some work to run reliably. Being able to check tolerances; since it's such a tight fitting gun, it's really vulnerable to tolerance stacking and certain elements might ultimately beyond what is dimensionally acceptable to cycle properly with high reliability. I've seen people with random problems ranging from guide rod, recoil spring, slide rails, extractor out of position etc. I got lucky and once I found the right load for it (seems to like Speer Gold Dots, 200gr, doesn't cycle well on the light loads) and the right mags (Wilson Combat 47), it ran without a hiccup for about 600 rounds when I had a failure to eject (stovepipe) and ran another 500+ with another failure to eject. This applies to any 1911.
The problem is checking all that stuff requires a lot of work with precise instruments. Kimber seems to have a pretty good QA and customer service. Honestly, if I wanted to buy a 1911 that I knew would run, I'd buy one from a custom outfit like Wilson Combat. Since I'm not willing to spend $3k+ on a 1911, I will not be buying another 1911. And even when you have a good gun, it takes time to find the right load and magazines, though this has been pretty well sorted out.
I'd much rather take my Glock, M&P9, P226, M9 or USP out. All of those guns eat dirty bulk ammo, premium self defense loads, match grade and everything else you could put through it.
_________________ "It's real, grew up in trife life, the times of white lines The hype vice, murderous nighttimes and knife fights invite crimes" - Nasir Jones
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